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Deferred cord clamping, cord milking, and immediate cord clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis

Deferred cord clamping, cord milking, and immediate cord clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis
Deferred cord clamping, cord milking, and immediate cord clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis

Background: umbilical cord clamping strategies at preterm birth have the potential to affect important health outcomes. The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of deferred cord clamping, umbilical cord milking, and immediate cord clamping in reducing neonatal mortality and morbidity at preterm birth. 

Methods: we conducted a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis. We searched medical databases and trial registries (from database inception until Feb 24, 2022; updated June 6, 2023) for randomised controlled trials comparing deferred (also known as delayed) cord clamping, cord milking, and immediate cord clamping for preterm births (<37 weeks' gestation). Quasi-randomised or cluster-randomised trials were excluded. Authors of eligible studies were invited to join the iCOMP collaboration and share individual participant data. All data were checked, harmonised, re-coded, and assessed for risk of bias following prespecified criteria. The primary outcome was death before hospital discharge. We performed intention-to-treat one-stage individual participant data meta-analyses accounting for heterogeneity to examine treatment effects overall and in prespecified subgroup analyses. Certainty of evidence was assessed with Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42019136640. 

Findings: we identified 2369 records, of which 48 randomised trials provided individual participant data and were eligible for our primary analysis. We included individual participant data on 6367 infants (3303 [55%] male, 2667 [45%] female, two intersex, and 395 missing data). Deferred cord clamping, compared with immediate cord clamping, reduced death before discharge (odds ratio [OR] 0·68 [95% CI 0·51–0·91], high-certainty evidence, 20 studies, n=3260, 232 deaths). For umbilical cord milking compared with immediate cord clamping, no clear evidence was found of a difference in death before discharge (OR 0·73 [0·44–1·20], low certainty, 18 studies, n=1561, 74 deaths). Similarly, for umbilical cord milking compared with deferred cord clamping, no clear evidence was found of a difference in death before discharge (0·95 [0·59–1·53], low certainty, 12 studies, n=1303, 93 deaths). We found no evidence of subgroup differences for the primary outcome, including by gestational age, type of delivery, multiple birth, study year, and perinatal mortality.

Interpretation: this study provides high-certainty evidence that deferred cord clamping, compared with immediate cord clamping, reduces death before discharge in preterm infants. This effect appears to be consistent across several participant-level and trial-level subgroups. These results will inform international treatment recommendations. Funding: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.

0140-6736
2209-2222
Seidler, Anna Lene
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Aberoumand, Mason
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Hunter, Kylie E.
7cd6adf7-01cf-416f-9b23-fe7253c7ec32
Barba, Angie
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Libesman, Sol
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Williams, Jonathan G
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Shrestha, Nipun
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Aagerup, Jannik
0a43403a-ec49-4d40-b6f4-b515c1214880
Sotiropoulos, James X.
df1b2186-7c98-496f-9839-9872927de272
Montgomery, Alan A
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Gyte, Gillian M L
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Duley, Lelia
db76a61c-94d8-4ec8-82cd-d7baca16f665
Askie, Lisa M
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Dorling, Jon
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iCOMP Collaborators
Seidler, Anna Lene
11f8fe73-3f0f-41d7-abdf-7d569b4df287
Aberoumand, Mason
663f8f20-d681-4d84-8c62-8685414b7982
Hunter, Kylie E.
7cd6adf7-01cf-416f-9b23-fe7253c7ec32
Barba, Angie
f4cf43eb-e167-4dd3-ad3d-fa9ffccfc1e2
Libesman, Sol
6dcb554b-51e4-4b36-8588-c6a072870b88
Williams, Jonathan G
9ba8f687-3355-41e3-87c6-c3c3b6184c91
Shrestha, Nipun
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Aagerup, Jannik
0a43403a-ec49-4d40-b6f4-b515c1214880
Sotiropoulos, James X.
df1b2186-7c98-496f-9839-9872927de272
Montgomery, Alan A
6f6e4e9e-e78b-43b0-9334-05522cfd6cdf
Gyte, Gillian M L
334dab34-f253-4172-bfde-6f30661665fa
Duley, Lelia
db76a61c-94d8-4ec8-82cd-d7baca16f665
Askie, Lisa M
6f8644af-12ea-4345-954e-2a6174aaa8c2
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630

Seidler, Anna Lene, Aberoumand, Mason, Hunter, Kylie E. and Dorling, Jon , iCOMP Collaborators (2023) Deferred cord clamping, cord milking, and immediate cord clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis. The Lancet, 402 (10418), 2209-2222. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(23)02468-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: umbilical cord clamping strategies at preterm birth have the potential to affect important health outcomes. The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of deferred cord clamping, umbilical cord milking, and immediate cord clamping in reducing neonatal mortality and morbidity at preterm birth. 

Methods: we conducted a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis. We searched medical databases and trial registries (from database inception until Feb 24, 2022; updated June 6, 2023) for randomised controlled trials comparing deferred (also known as delayed) cord clamping, cord milking, and immediate cord clamping for preterm births (<37 weeks' gestation). Quasi-randomised or cluster-randomised trials were excluded. Authors of eligible studies were invited to join the iCOMP collaboration and share individual participant data. All data were checked, harmonised, re-coded, and assessed for risk of bias following prespecified criteria. The primary outcome was death before hospital discharge. We performed intention-to-treat one-stage individual participant data meta-analyses accounting for heterogeneity to examine treatment effects overall and in prespecified subgroup analyses. Certainty of evidence was assessed with Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42019136640. 

Findings: we identified 2369 records, of which 48 randomised trials provided individual participant data and were eligible for our primary analysis. We included individual participant data on 6367 infants (3303 [55%] male, 2667 [45%] female, two intersex, and 395 missing data). Deferred cord clamping, compared with immediate cord clamping, reduced death before discharge (odds ratio [OR] 0·68 [95% CI 0·51–0·91], high-certainty evidence, 20 studies, n=3260, 232 deaths). For umbilical cord milking compared with immediate cord clamping, no clear evidence was found of a difference in death before discharge (OR 0·73 [0·44–1·20], low certainty, 18 studies, n=1561, 74 deaths). Similarly, for umbilical cord milking compared with deferred cord clamping, no clear evidence was found of a difference in death before discharge (0·95 [0·59–1·53], low certainty, 12 studies, n=1303, 93 deaths). We found no evidence of subgroup differences for the primary outcome, including by gestational age, type of delivery, multiple birth, study year, and perinatal mortality.

Interpretation: this study provides high-certainty evidence that deferred cord clamping, compared with immediate cord clamping, reduces death before discharge in preterm infants. This effect appears to be consistent across several participant-level and trial-level subgroups. These results will inform international treatment recommendations. Funding: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 14 November 2023
Published date: 7 December 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493716
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493716
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: 6c078bd3-4bfd-48c4-ad2d-1dca250943d9
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2024 17:10
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 02:10

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Contributors

Author: Anna Lene Seidler
Author: Mason Aberoumand
Author: Kylie E. Hunter
Author: Angie Barba
Author: Sol Libesman
Author: Jonathan G Williams
Author: Nipun Shrestha
Author: Jannik Aagerup
Author: James X. Sotiropoulos
Author: Alan A Montgomery
Author: Gillian M L Gyte
Author: Lelia Duley
Author: Lisa M Askie
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Corporate Author: iCOMP Collaborators

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